The Future of Business: Faster Than Real-Time?

Presenting at LeWeb London, Analyst Jeremiah Owyang of Altimer explained that the conference theme (“Faster Than Real Time”) referred to the importance of anticipating customer needs, not just reacting to them as fast as possible.

Just as the top sport stars have learned to anticipate where the ball is going to be, based on their long experience of the underlying patterns of play, organizations can now monitor the patterns of business and take action.

The challenge in business is that there is rarely just one ball in play. Owyang outlined the complexity of the problem, multiplying the number of sources of information by the number of different possible channels, the number of different screens, and the different stages of engagement. This results in a massive 525 potential ways that customers can interact with a company, even without taking into account different customer profiles and geographic location.

Owyang talked about his company’s research into the “Dynamic Customer Journey,” where today’s consumers face an overwhelming amount of choices:

“A few weeks ago, I was in Times Square. I had a mission to count every logo from a fixed position. I tried to do it. But in a few seconds, I gave up. There were so many digital screens that were constantly changing – at least 15 of them. This is what we call the dynamic customer journey. This same experience will be in the living room and the retail store in the future”

And the amount of data available is rising exponentially:

“250 million photos are uploaded to Facebook each day. If you printed them out, would be 80 Eiffel Towers of photos each day.”

He gave two examples of organizations that are using new technology to change the way they interact with customers. The first was the famous case of Tesco using the walls of the Seoul metro to create a “virtual supermarket” where shoppers could use their mobile devices to choose products and have them delivered.

Organizations are struggling to figure out what new sources of information they need to track and how the experience will change across different channels and devices. And in the future, with technology that can provide highly contextual information to customers, advertising itself may evolve to something else, resulting in disruption to traditional revenue streams.

Owyang also talked about Altimeter’s research into “The Sentient World”, where everything around is “alive and full of information.”

He also talked about how new technology is helping monitor our own bodies, whether it’s running devices that track our performance, or “smart pajamas” for babies (tagline: “we know how your baby feels”). And how customer experiences are being changed, in restaurants featuring “e-tables” that react to the food that is placed on them, or by looking at the world through devices such as Google Glass

Owyang ended with three big questions that business need to answer in the future:

If everything emits data, how will we sort intelligence from noise?

How will consumers communicate with inanimate objects? How will these interactions be measured?

At what point does this new world become self-sufficient beyond human intervention? Which companies will benefit from this?

I am an Innovation Evangelist for SAP. This blog only contains my personal views, thoughts and opinions. It is not endorsed by SAP nor does it constitute any official communication of SAP. You should follow me on Twitter and Subscribe by email